Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
I Wonder How Many Of You Will Still Be Happy To Spend Their Holidays In A Country Such As This?
29 Answers
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Give or take the odd bomb, things are probably the same as they have always been for tourists. Liife is changing in Egypt for the locals though. I was talking to one of my Cairo based colleages about a year ago and she said that some men stormed into her local hairdressers` salon and started beating up the customers and staff because they disagreed with men cutting womens` hair. I`m sure tourists will still go there though - who worries a
sp1814
/// What do you know about Egyptian culture? ///
Enough to know that it is quite alien to my culture, as are many others.
That is why I am not happy that some of these cultures being imported into the UK, it's not about racism, but it is about culture.
One cannot change their culture just by emigrating into another's country.
And before you disagree with me, could you seriously believe that English men would gather in mobs to string somebody up from a lamppost for stealing a push bike?
/// What do you know about Egyptian culture? ///
Enough to know that it is quite alien to my culture, as are many others.
That is why I am not happy that some of these cultures being imported into the UK, it's not about racism, but it is about culture.
One cannot change their culture just by emigrating into another's country.
And before you disagree with me, could you seriously believe that English men would gather in mobs to string somebody up from a lamppost for stealing a push bike?
Since you ask, aog, I'd be happy to go to Baghdad. The problem, from a tourist point of view, is that sites of interest may not be accessible; I haven't looked. Kabul has no particular interest and is, I believe, inaccessible to ordinary Britons.
I still wonder why you ask the question of countries "such as this". Is it that we are supposed to be scared for our own safety? Or is it some moral judgment, that we ought not to visit places where someone might be lynched? .
I still wonder why you ask the question of countries "such as this". Is it that we are supposed to be scared for our own safety? Or is it some moral judgment, that we ought not to visit places where someone might be lynched? .
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.